From bba9f7df211d63293e2a957872d156a0a6dfcd48 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Marcel Ribeiro-Dantas Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2022 12:05:34 -0300 Subject: Fixes typos in many different English articles Signed-off-by: Marcel Ribeiro-Dantas --- raku.html.markdown | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'raku.html.markdown') diff --git a/raku.html.markdown b/raku.html.markdown index a8059791..53404f58 100644 --- a/raku.html.markdown +++ b/raku.html.markdown @@ -688,7 +688,7 @@ say (0 or False); # OUTPUT: «False␤». my ($a, $b, $c, $d, $e) = 1, 0, False, True, 'pi'; say $a && $b && $c; # OUTPUT: «0␤», the first falsey value say $a && $b && $c; # OUTPUT: «False␤», the first falsey value -say $a && $d && $e; # OUTPUT: «pi␤», last operand since everthing before is truthy +say $a && $d && $e; # OUTPUT: «pi␤», last operand since everything before is truthy # `||` returns the first argument that evaluates to `True`. say $b || $a || $d; # OUTPUT: «1␤» @@ -1965,7 +1965,7 @@ say so 'abbbbc' ~~ / a b* c /; # OUTPUT: «True␤» say so 'aec' ~~ / a b* c /; # OUTPUT: «False␤», "b"(s) are optional, not replaceable. # `**` - (Unbound) Quantifier -# If you squint hard enough, you might understand why exponentation is used +# If you squint hard enough, you might understand why exponentiation is used # for quantity. say so 'abc' ~~ / a b**1 c /; # OUTPUT: «True␤», exactly one time say so 'abc' ~~ / a b**1..3 c /; # OUTPUT: «True␤», one to three times -- cgit v1.2.3